The
Meta Tag Myth
by: Bobby Heard
The more the better right? Wrong. At least
when it comes to meta tags. The history of the meta tag started off as
a nice tool that web sites could use to show the search engines what the
site was about without the words showing up on the actual page. It seemed
like a great idea until people started to abuse the meta tag. They would
add highly searched for keywords that were unrelated to their site in their
meta tags in hopes of attracting additional traffic. The search engines
caught on and lowered the importance of meta tags - they figured out that
if they put more emphasis on the visible content of a site, people would
have a much more difficult time “cheating”. Turns out that they were right.
Now, don’t get me wrong, meta tags still
do carry some significance. They need to be consistent with the content
of your site, but most importantly they’re somewhat of a measure of the
legitimacy of your site. The most common myth when it comes to search engine
optimization is that the best meta tag is the one packed with the most
information. This couldn't’t be further from the truth.
The keyword meta tag has been abused more
than any other meta tag and does not carry as much importance as most of
the others because of this reason. Most search engines only read the first
few characters of the tag, if they read it at all, because they know that
most keyword meta tags are filled with spam - Just the same words repeated
over and over. That is why it’s important to get your most important keywords
to the front of your keyword meta tag.
The meta tag that still carries the most
importance is the description meta tag. This is because it serves as a
description for the particular page of your site that it is included in.
Description meta tags should be unique to each page of your site, as search
engines frequently use it as the description under your page title that
appears in the search results. Obviously, you want your description to
be representative of the page being displayed.
So in conclusion, don’t use meta tags the
way we all have a compulsive urge to - by packing it with everything that
we can think of. It seems like a good idea, but it will only help you to
fail in your goal of the holy grail: higher rankings.
About The Author
Bobby Heard is the VP at Abalone Designs
and is an active writer of SEO articles. More articles he has written are
available at http://www.abalone.ca/resources/.
"What keeps so
many people back is simply unwillingness to pay
the price, to
make the exertion, the effort to sacrifice their
ease and comfort."
*Orison Swett Marden {1850-1924
Founder of Success Magazine}

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